Why Sri Lanka鈥檚 suffering may not end soon

IN MAY, Sri Lanka defaulted on its overseas debt. Amid political upheaval and human suffering, the Indian Ocean island is still awaiting a $2.9 billion rescue by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Lacking resources to buy even , the economy is falling into an . The poverty rate has in one year; output has cratered and inflation soared. A decade of welfare gains has been eroded. All of this raises a question: When did sovereign debt restructuring become so hard?
In a less complex world, poor economies defaulted to rich nations. The , comprising the US, Japan, UK, and other advanced nations, coordinated rescheduling efforts among its members and with the IMF. Nobody gained much by prolonging the misery of a sovereign debtor that couldn鈥檛 be liquidated anyway.
But Sri Lanka鈥檚 is a 21st century insolvency with several competing interests. Big-bulge institutions like BlackRock, Inc. and Morgan Stanley Investment Management have formed their own group to , or half of the government鈥檚 foreign-currency debt. In addition, Sri Lanka鈥檚 bilateral creditors include China and India. Neither Beijing nor New Delhi wants the other to extract more financial or geopolitical mileage out of the crisis.
To speed things along, the besieged debtor has broached the idea of a : Once India has that status, it will get any sweetheart deal offered to China, which holds 52% of the bilateral debt. Such assurances haven鈥檛 managed to break the logjam. If anything, there鈥檚 reason to fear that Colombo鈥檚 ordeal will continue even after the IMF deal. In a move reminiscent of the hedge-fund boss Paul Singer鈥檚 campaign against Argentina, Hamilton Reserve Bank Ltd. has Sri Lanka in New York.
The delay in resolution of sovereign crises is increasingly a norm. For 15 years after its 2001 default, Argentina had to worry about its presidential plane or naval fleet being . It was only in 2016 that the billionaire鈥檚 Elliott Management got what it wanted and went away. That was hardly a one-time affair. Until the early 1990s, less than 10% of crisis-hit countries ended up in litigation; now half do. The 3% of restructured debt governments typically get sued for is unusual even for corporate borrowings, according to the European Central Bank鈥檚 and other researchers. 鈥淲e are not aware of many fields of law in which such a high share of disputed claims end up in court,鈥 they say.
The chance that some minority investors would try to for better terms is high. The bigger the loss that鈥檚 imposed on bondholders, the more likely that some of them will hold out. On the other hand, if it kept the punishment low for all, then Sri Lanka would find it hard to convince the IMF that it won鈥檛 be back for a second rescue. After a 50% haircut on international bonds, and a 25% write-down in the money owed to bilateral and multilateral creditors, the government鈥檚 debt load in 10 years will still exceed 130% of gross domestic product at current bond yields, higher than 121% of GDP at present, according to . The think tank鈥檚 Sri Lanka policy group estimates that a 10-year extension of maturities on current domestic debt could bring the burden down to 101% of GDP.
Touching local-currency debt would be tricky. A Sri Lankan bank that lent money to the government in 2021 has lost most of it to . Its investors 鈥 and depositors 鈥 could balk at holding on to those low-yielding notes for another 10 years. However, it鈥檚 also possible that the domestic bond market will see the pain as an unavoidable side-effect of lifesaving surgery. With a little luck, the near-12% contraction in output may reverse, boosted by tea, textiles, and tourism services. As the pressure from a strong dollar and the war in Ukraine begin to fade, an end to shortages could slay inflation; the 28% yield on three-year, local-currency bonds may start sliding toward last year鈥檚 9% level.
That return of confidence will need a spark, though. The new President Ranil Wickremesinghe isn鈥檛 wrong when he says there鈥檚 when his country doesn鈥檛 have an economy. But it does have a financial system, which could be put on a surer footing by changing the mandate of the central bank to a operating a fixed exchange rate.
The new central bank law, which the IMF insisted on, repeats the usual homilies: , and a commitment to independent monetary policy. The messy politics of this formerly civil war-torn country is unlikely to respect those lofty ideals once the current storm has passed. Besides, there鈥檚 no reason why a small, open economy should want its own monetary policy. For all the warnings routinely repeated about the impending demise of Hong Kong鈥檚 dollar peg, the link survives as an important anchor. The Indian counterparts of the wealthy Chinese could do with a similar hard-currency enclave at their doorstep.
It might still be something to consider once the IMF rescue is under way. The disastrous policies of former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his ruined this tropical idyll. Untangling the knots of creditors鈥 claims has delayed Sri Lanka鈥檚 rescue and stalled its recovery. Hopefully, 2023 will bring the island of 22 million people better luck, more money 鈥 and fresher ideas.聽
BLOOMBERG OPINION


